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Lovely neat layout Clefchef - I wish my work was so tidy. Did you really get a couple of 2200uF caps onto that Audiobah board, or did you mean 220uF? I am curious what type of caps you used? I noticed that you stuck to using the onboard connectors. Without ever actually doing listening tests, I have always assumed it is better to replace these with soldered joints for the final installation in a box. I guess the performance advantage is minimal, I just always went on the idea that all connectors are flawed to some extent and that soldered joints are less so (eg. you can hear the differences between RCA sockets, binding posts etc.) If anyone can contradict me here, that might make my life marginally simpler in the future.
ClefClef, any information on the remote control and the chasis that you are using with the mod? Source that you purchased it from would be helpful.
Performance gains are somewhat negligible Just look inside your speaker - do you see wires soldered to the drivers and to binding posts?
the other much cheaper greenboard (ebayprices) has a much shorter distance from chip to decoupling ceramics.
Based on observation above by Markvdv I purchased the board (I believe it is known as 'YBDZ' perhaps someone can confirm?) Tested it yesterday and although it had a truly horrendous turn on pop/fart noise, the sound quality exceeded Audiobah quite comfortably. It was noticeably more detailed and refined - despite costing less than 15 USD.
The "truly horrendous turn on pop/fart noise" is not synonymous with quality - I wouldn't use this board unless fitted with speaker protection modules. Somehow I think that you may have killed your Audiobah board completely and anything else may sound better now
P.S...
eBay is your friend
Have spent plenty of time on ebay already looking for a remote solution, before I found your post of July 14th with the great picture.Had found this for vol only: http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/6CH-Remote-Motor-ALPS-Volume-Potentiometer-Control-Adjust-50K-6-W-Remote-/201077764009?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item2ed12b2fa9&_uhb=1There are plenty with multiple inputs (4-6), but yours seems to only have two which is ideal, can you please help us out with a source ?
There are plenty of 2 channel relay boards on eBay, you would have to modify them a bit. The remote you posted has 4 input selector + on/off channel. To use 2 input channels you have to bridge 1+3 and 2+4 on the remote. The remote puts out +5V signal on the input select channels, so you could either use 5V relay boards and drive relays directly (remote provides enough current for that) or use 12V relay boards and drive them via on-board trigger circuitry.On/off channel is a "shunt" channel (board controls connection to ground) so your voltage there depends on the positive voltage provided (e.g. drive 12V on/off relay with +12V or 24V relay with +24V, etc.) You would use the on/off channel relay to control the power supply to your TPA3116 board.On my amp you can see a LT7812 (attached to the bottom next to the relay) to provide 12V for the remote board and the on/off relay (next to the 7812). 7812 also protects the remote board from your main power source which is going to be somewhere between 18-24V. Remote board has its own LT7805 so you can feed it 9-15V.Here's the relay board similar to what I used: http://www.ebay.com/itm/400272908552?_trksid=p2059210.m2749.l2649&ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AITYou need to parallel the outputs, remove all the resistors and transistors and connect the remote board switching signal wires directly to relay coil legs.I blew up the picture for greater detail on the remote board. The channel control pins are marked Q4-Q8 on the board with Q9 being ground pin. In order to have 2 instead of 4 inputs provided by the board you have to bridge Q4 with Q6 and Q5 with Q7 (blue lines), and use the +5V and Ground signal to control the input selection relays.
Gainsetting 20dB could have little less distortion if inputlevel is high I feel but I haven't compared that on transformers on input. Inputimpedance changes too, there might be a best match setting for the transformers you used.